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Freestyle - 3L/3R Single-Arm

Posted by Barbara Hummel on Feb 23, 2007 08:00AM (15,126 views)

The best drills are often those that ask you to do LESS rather than more - or to do NOTHING rather than something. Single-Arm freestyle is one of them.

Why Do It:
This drill COULD be all about the pull, but it's not. This drill is all about what you do with the non-working arm - the arm that is out in front of your body. By focusing on the lead arm, and getting that hand to do NOTHING, you are working on several important aspects of your stroke. You're working on great extension and a powerful catch. You're working on not crossing the centerline or leveraging for air. And you're working on sending your energy FORWARD.

How To Do It:
This drill is very simple. Take 3 strokes of freestyle with your right arm - then three strokes with your left arm. Keep the non-working arm extended out front.

You can breathe as often as you like. You can even use fins or a pull buoy.

The goal is to keep the lead arm stable and steady and straight - as if it had a steel bar running through it. At the same time, you want to maintain a 'soft' hand -- one that lets you FEEL the water as it flows over and around it.

If your lead arm is steady and straight - and if your hand is sensitive to the pressure of the water, you should feel the water against the tip-tops of your fingers.

This swimmer is not keeping her lead arm steady. You can see that she's leveraging for air, and not swimming as smoothly as the other swimmer. She's not moving directly FORWARD.

How To Do It Really Well (the Fine Points):
Try to focus ENTIRELY on the lead arm, keeping it rock steady and pointed directly toward the other end of the pool. Try to feel WHERE and HOW the water is interacting with your hand. You SHOULD feel it hitting under your fingernails.




Responses

Responded Feb 23, 2007 10:38AM

This is a similar drill to Karlyn Pipes Neilsen's suggestion in her swim camps and definitely on her new DVD titled, "Go Swim Freestyle with Karlyn Pipes-Neilsen." I have been working with it since September and am having good results. It seems a bit harder to do when sprinting, but it feels great for middle distance freestyle.
Fly Di

Responded Feb 23, 2007 10:46AM

Clarification; of course drills are to be done in a relaxed manner. In the previous discussion I was referring to losing some of the 'feel' of the water, on the lead hand fingers, when sprinting. While I'm warming down I notice that 75% of the recreational swimmers in our pool cross over the center line. Too bad they don't receive this "goswim.tv" article.
Fly Di

Responded Feb 23, 2007 11:10AM

If you keep the non-stroking arm out in front, I would suggest that you are not able to replicate the reach (of the stroking arm) and the body rotation.

Suggest it's better to keep the non-stroking arm at the side and allow full hip/body rotation. Certainly it's tougher that way, but the hips will allow the stroking arm to work as it would in the "full" rather than just paddling as is likely to happen.

Responded Feb 23, 2007 11:56AM

Hi, Clppentaqua
While you may sacrifice some rotation while doing this drill, I feel that the benefits are well worth it. It really makes you aware of what your lead arm is doing, and for people who cross the centerline, it can be an eye-opening drill.

Doing single-arm free with the non-working arm at your side is also a great drill... no doubt about it. It helps you focus on rotation. Here's the link to our take on that version of single arm....

http://www.goswim.tv/drilloftheweek_commen...

Responded Feb 24, 2007 12:45PM

Hi guys, you topped ... as usual !

It's a great drill and I usully perform this exercise during my training.

It forces you to focus on relaxing your non-stroking arm (and hand in particular), your shoulders, the neck and you focus also on the control of body rotation.

A little suggestion: a great kick stroke'd be raccomended.

Thanks all.

Responded Mar 09, 2007 03:11PM

Hello,

my first thought was: Would it be too simple? I tried and found the drill really simple. But finally, I tried it immidiately after swimming 400m (free, easy, but 25m fast after passing the 300m). Now, becoming a little bit tired, it was no more that easy to master. Did I lift the head to get some air? Yes, fact is that the arm dropped when breathing. It took me some time to correct -- but then it work better. I learned a lot! Thanks!

Andreas

Responded May 14, 2007 01:38PM

I'd do this if my shoulder wasn't bad. But doing it with good shoulders is a great idea to increase awareness so that over reaching is not a problem. As well as letting the kick drive the body and not pressing down on the water with ur arm. Great focuses!


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